Wednesday, August 13, 2014

ShoreTel Mobility 8 delivers mobile video collaboration

Why I'm willing to pay an early termination fee to leave Verizon | Murder suspect asks Siri where to hide a dead body

Network World Convergence and VoIP

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ShoreTel Mobility 8 delivers mobile video collaboration
ShoreTel has launched a major update to ShoreTel Mobility with version 8, offering mobile-enabled video conferencing. ShoreTel Mobility 8 is integrated with the ShoreTel Communicator desktop call-control suite, and the new software enhancements have added a virtualized ShoreTel Mobility Router.ShoreTel Mobility 8 provides video communications via iOS and Android smartphones and tablets with single touch video calling from the keypad. Users can also participate in multi-party video sessions between mobile devices and room-based video communication systems. ShoreTel supports room systems using industry standards H.264/AVC, including Lifesize and Polycom. Video calls are supported over local or remote Wi-Fi and cellular data networks. Another new feature to the Mobility client is that the “join” button, delivering a one-touch audio bridge login that works with third-party Web collaboration tools. ShoreTel Mobility 8 also supports video communication from the user’s Windows desktop using ShoreTel Communicator.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More


: xMatters

Complimentary eGuide: 8 Ways to Stop IT Alert Fatigue
Reacting to a never-ending stream of IT alerts takes up valuable time and resources, costs money, and prevents IT departments from playing a more strategic role in a company's success. Read the eGuide and learn what you can do right now to stop alert fatigue in 8 easy steps so you can begin to focus on addressing your real business needs. Learn more >>

WHITE PAPER: SIGMA Solutions and EMC Corporation

Confront consumerization with convergence
Virtualization expert Elias Khnaser spotlights the security, compliance, and governance issues that arise when enterprise users "consumerize" with shadow IT and public cloud services. And he provides a prescription for modifying this behavior with a private cloud hosted on a robust converged infrastructure. Learn More

Why I'm willing to pay an early termination fee to leave Verizon
These days, most people use smartphones for everything but making phone calls. I never got the memo, however, and still dial out numbers on a regular basis. So service means something. At the same time, I want a phone that runs well and is well-supported.Currently, I have neither.So, come October, after Tim Cook introduces the iPhone 6, count me among those who will be queueing up for one. On AT&T. I gave Windows Phone and Verizon a chance and they have failed. It means an Early Termination Fee (ETF) of a few hundred bucks, but maybe I can make that selling the phone on Glyde. Here's why: Verizon's throttling. Usually companies deny it until they get caught, but Verizon has come right out and said it will throttle certain users. Oh sure, they said only unlimited bandwidth users only. They also cooperated with the NSA after umpteen promises of protection our privacy. Quite frankly, I don't trust you. Lousy coverage. This may shock some of you but it is true. In the canyons where I live in Orange County, wireless phone coverage is a challenge. When I was with AT&T, calls were always clear and went through on the first try. Verizon, which always toots its own horn about its coverage, just plain stinks. Calls don't go through, my parents and others complain of not being able to reach me, and calls are constantly dropped. Enough is enough. Cost. My Verizon plan is comparable to my plan with AT&T in terms of usage and data allowance, but costs about $40 to $50 more a month, assuming there are no extra charges. Samsung let me down. I had to go to a Verizon store and ask them to special order the Samsung ATIV SE. That should have been my warning of Samsung's commitment. But I bought the phone and now I'm left hanging. Nokia owners have Windows Phone 8.1 and are already seeing the first update to it. I have no ETA on 8.1 because it's up to Samsung to do the firmware update. Given that I had to ask for the phone, it wasn't on display, and the recent lawsuit between Microsoft and Samsung, I have no confidence their relationship will improve or Samsung will expend any energy on its WP products. Plus, Windows Phone has some really annoying quirks, like you can't power off the phone while it is plugged in. There are some things I will miss. I really like the My Verizon app. It's a great way to manage your account. And iOS is pretty boring compared to the more active Live Tiles of WP8. But enough is enough. See you in two months, AT&T.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More


WHITE PAPER: Dell

Achieve Deeper Network Security and Application Control
Next-generation firewalls (NGFWs) have emerged to revolutionize network security as we once knew it. Yet to safeguard an organization from today's ever-evolving threats, NGFWs must be able to deliver an even deeper level of network security. View Now

Murder suspect asks Siri where to hide a dead body
A murder suspect out of Florida reportedly asked Siri where to hide the body of his dead roomate Read More


WHITE PAPER: BMC Software

Guide to Managing and Lowering Mainframe Software Charges
Monthly license charges (MLC) are rising by 7% or more each year, and account for 30% of total mainframe costs. Yet managing MLC costs is an inexact science. This best practice guide provides a step-by-step process to reduce mainframe MLC costs up to 20% without compromising business critical services. Learn More

Texas, Florida, North Carolina lead IT job growth in first half of 2014, study finds
U.S. technology professionals searching for jobs may want to look in states not normally considered IT hot spots.The three states with the highest percentage of IT job growth for the first half of 2014 were Texas at 5.99 percent, Florida at 5.64 percent and North Carolina at 3.8 percent, according to a report from IT job site Dice.The top 10 states in the report “are growing from a lower base compared to a state like California so it’s more about the rate of growth,” said Shravan Goli, president of Dice, which reached its findings by analyzing employment data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.Companies in traditional technology hubs such as New York and California are still hiring, but those states have a larger employment base, he said. California employs the most technology professionals in the U.S. and New York, at 3.08 percent, had the sixth-highest growth rate in the first six months of the year, the report noted. Washington, home to Microsoft and Amazon.com, ranked fifth in the growth rate at 3.53 percent.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More

New products of the week 08.11.2014
Our roundup of intriguing new products. Read how to submit an entry to Network World's products of the week slideshow. Product name: HotLink DR ExpressTo read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More


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